He dismissed threats to make him
a one-term president as he doubled
down on his development agenda.
“If you want to compete with
me, bring better ideas – tell Kenyans
your plans for agriculture, roads,
electricity, health and water,” Ruto
challenged critics during a stopover
in Laikipia, where he was met by
cheering crowds.
“These endless political noises
won’t put food on tables,” he added.
The President’s five-day tour, his
first major foray into the Central region
since his bitter fallout with Gachagua, has set the stage for escalating
tensions.
Earlier, Ruto claimed that his
former deputy had demanded Sh10 billion to “organise” Mt Kenya politics, warning: “If my fate is one-term, so be it.”
Gachagua’s camp has dismissed
the allegations as blackmail.
Despite the political theatrics,
Ruto unveiled projects for the region, including electricity connections for 15,000 Nyeri and Laikipia
households.
He also unveiled new fresh
produce markets in Laikipia and
pledged to accelerate work on the
Mau Mau Road and other stalled
infrastructure projects.
“We’re delivering what we promised,” declared Ruto, flanked by
Deputy President Kithure Kindiki
and six Cabinet Secretaries.
Kindiki took a veiled swipe at Gachagua saying: “I won’t exchange
insults – my job is to deliver Kenya.”
The tour exposed deepening rifts
in the Kenya Kwanza camp as the
former DP’s allies dismissed Ruto’s
projects as “rebranded Jubilee initiatives” from the retired President Uhuru Kenyatta era.
A section of
Mt Kenya MPs had warned of “political isolation” in 2027, a claim
Ruto rejected saying: “No region
will be left behind.”
Embu Governor Cecily Mbarire rallied support for the President saying, “We elected Ruto to work –
not to quit midstream.”
Analysts say the tour tests whether tangible deliverables can outweigh growing discontent.
The region delivered more than
30 per cent of Ruto’s 2022 votes but
Gachagua’s influence looms large.
“Kenya’s economy is stabilising,”
Ruto said, citing the strengthening
shilling and falling fuel prices.
The President said he was clear
that his agenda was about development, and not drama, as he broke
ground on new classrooms in Nyeri.
He dismissed the opposition, which
is led by, among others, Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka, saying they
have nothing to offer Kenyans.
“If you want to compete with me,
go get a better agenda and tell Kenyans what you will do about agriculture, roads, electricity, health and
water,” he added.
Ruto urged Gachagua and Musyoka to wait for the 2027 election
for Kenyans to decide whether he worked or not. “You (opposition)
will go round and your endeavours
would amount to nothing. Stop
these unnecessary noises,” the head
of state said during a stop in Laikipia.
Gachagua’s allies have also
pledged to oppose Ruto’s 2027 reelection bid and dismissed the Mt
Kenya tour as merely for splashing
goodies.
But in a televised interview with
Mt Kenya vernacular stations, the
President said he was ready to go
home.
“If my fate is to be one-term president, so be it,” Ruto said, a message
he reiterated in his tours, saying
Kenyans would have the ultimate
say.
CSs Opiyo Wandayi (Energy),
Rebecca Miano (Tourism), Alice Wahome (Lands) and William
Kabogo (ICT) accompanied the
head of state.
Kindiki, for his part, said that as
government officers, they “will not
waste time trying to argue with people without an agenda for Kenya.”
“They are not telling Kenyans
what they are going to do to make
things better,” the DP said, assuring
the President of his support.
“People are advising me that I am
not exchanging with the President. I
am not in the opposition...my job is
to defend the President and ensure
we deliver for the people of Kenya,”
he added.
“Let those with other ideas be
told I have no time...I account for
every day I spend in that office. I
don’t know what those speaking did
during their time.”
Among the issues that MPs cited in Gachagua’s impeachment was
that he advanced sectarian politics
at the expense of patriotism.
On this, Ruto said he would continue working with leaders from
across the country and that no region would be sidelined because of
its political leanings.
He dismissed the narrative by
the opposition of a plot to sideline
Central region in the 2027 political
matrix.
“We have no room for fitina na
upuzi (nonsense). Don’t be lied to
that this region will be left behind,
that is a lie,” the President said.
His lieutenants, among them
Kikuyu MP Kimani Ichung’wah,
echoed the sentiments, saying they
will soldier on despite the heavy
criticism.
“We accept names as long as Kenya moves forward,” the Majority
leader, who was among the leading
lights in Gachagua’s impeachment
bid, said.
Mbarire added: “Let’s not listen
to detractors. We elected Ruto to
fulfill his agenda for us. We can’t
be told two and a half years later
that we should abandon the government.”
Area leaders also hailed the Kenya Kwanza administration for restoring peace in the once-disturbed
parts of Laikipia.
A confident Ruto said he was sure
wananchi, including central Kenya
residents, would take note of his efforts to change things for the better.
He cited the stabilisation of the
Kenya shilling against the US dollar, the falling prices of fuel, maize
flour and other basic commodities
as signs of progress.
“For two years, I have been planning things because the economy was
on a downward spin. The economy is now okay and we will focus
on building roads, markets and
schools,” the President said.
Ruto landed in the region with
pledges to complete road projects,
markets, and classrooms and connect more homes to the electricity
grid.